According to Axios, antisemitic hate crimes are trending higher this year in several major cities, and could surpass 2021 numbers — a possible record year, according to the Center for the Study of Hate and Extremism.
Why it matters: The White House has expressed
alarm about rising antisemitic violence across the U.S. and a jump in racist and antisemitic social media posts, but
collecting data is difficult because many police departments are failing to
report hate crimes.
By the numbers:
·
New York saw a preliminary count of 260
antisemitic crimes from Jan. 1 to Dec. 1, the Center for the Study of Hate and
Extremism at California State University, San Bernardino, found. The city
experienced 170 cases during the same period in 2021.
·
Los Angeles faced 80 antisemitic
cases from January to Oct. 31, 2022, the center said. The nation's
second-largest city experienced 71 during the same period in 2021.
·
Chicago saw 30 antisemitic episodes from
January to Oct. 31, 2022, compared to eight in the same period last year.
·
Cases appear flat in Boston, Denver, Las
Vegas and Portland, Oregon.
The center collects hate crime stats from police
data, state reports and open records requests.
Zoom out: The FBI said this week that anti-Jewish
hate crimes declined significantly, with 396 incidents in 2021 compared to 959 in
2020.
Yes, but: The FBI hate crime report was based on
data received from just 11,883 of the 18,812 law enforcement agencies in the
U.S. and excludes many large cities with high numbers of Jewish residents.
"Excluded in this report were cities you wouldn't
exclude from major sports leagues," Brian Levin, director of the center,
told Axios.
Levin said when you include antisemitic hate crimes
in New York and Los Angeles, for example, the number of
antisemitic hate crimes nationally in 2021 is around a record level. And 2022
could surpass that.
Zoom in: Antisemitic hate crimes have been rising
in recent years, even in smaller states.
Wisconsin saw between 2015 and 2021 an almost a 500%
increase in antisemitic episodes, Samantha Abramson, executive director of the
Nathan and Esther Pelz Holocaust Education Resource Center in Milwaukee, told
Axios.
Flashback: October marked the four-year
anniversary of the attack at Pittsburgh's Tree of Life synagogue, the deadliest
assault on Jewish people in U.S. history.
Eleven people were killed and six were injured at
the Pittsburgh synagogue on the morning of Oct. 27, 2018,
when a gunman stormed the building in the attack that brought more attention to
the nation's rising antisemitic violence.
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